This discourse-common decorator was dependent on the core app, hence creating a circular reference that was breaking the embroider upgrade. (see: #24391)
Why this change?
As the number of themes which the Discourse team supports officially
grows, we want to ensure that changes made to Discourse core do not
break the plugins. As such, we are adding a step to our Github actions
test job to run the system tests for all official themes.
What does this change do?
This change adds a step to our Github actions test job to run the system
tests for all official plugins. This is achieved by the introduction of
the `themes:install_all_official` Rake task which installs all the
themes that are officially supported by the Discourse team.
Raised in https://meta.discourse.org/t/keyboard-navigation-messes-up-the-search-menu/285405
We were incorrectly accessing the highlighted search result target's href which caused issues when navigating the topic list (eg /latest) with **j / k** and then immediately after accessing the search menu and navigating to and selecting a search result with the keyboard.
### Current Behavior
Hitting enter on a search result redirects to the href of the topic in the topic list that was previously highlighted.
### Expected Behavior
Hitting enter on a search result redirects to the href of the highlighted search result.
The default for webpack is to keep cached values indefinitely. In discourse, this unbound memory usage causes node to raise an OOM error after 50-100 rebuilds in development mode (with source maps enabled). Setting maxGenerations=1 means that the cache will be cleaned up regularly. With this change, I see no discernible increase in memory after 150+ rebuilds.
Previously, the discourse-hbr plugin took the entire app tree as its input, and the result would then be merged into the app. This is wasteful and more likely to cause problems in the build pipeline.
See also https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/24376
Ember-cli has built-in error pages when there is a build error. Previously these were not being used in Discourse because our custom proxy middleware was too early in the stack. This commit reorders things so that the "broccoli-watcher" middleware runs before our custom proxy. It also disables the `historySupportMiddleware`, which doesn't make sense in our 'always proxy' setup.
This PR refactors the following:
* leaving all the CSS applied to the old `modal-body` classes in their respective files
* made new clean styling for `.d-modal` and refactored the template to use the new BEM classes
* `inner-`, `middle-`, `outer-` container classes are gone and replaced with simplified `wrapper` and `container` classes
* use standardised max-sizes with modifiers `-large` and `-max`
* lighter backdrop,
* min-width to prevent puny modals
* other styling changes regarding padding, close button,…
* pulled out all modal overrides into a general `modal-overrides` file + cleanup of outdated CSS
* pulled out login and create account modal styling into their own file, cause it's such a big override
* removed old general login.scss file for mobile & desktop
* only kept some remainders I don't want to touch in `app/assets/stylesheets/common/base/login.scss`
Previously this was being handled in two places:
1. As a monkey-patch to the Ember router. This would 'trick' the router into rendering a different route, but would leave the browser URL bar unchanged. Many possible bugs can come from this state
2. In the DiscourseURL.routeTo function. This functioned fine as a redirect, but wouldn't have any effect when the transition is handled by Ember
This commit refactors things so that the DiscourseURL redirects are handled the same as our permalinks. When the Ember 'unknown' route is hit, we check for a possible rewrite and redirect there. This is a supported way of doing things, and should be more robust going forwards.
Previously we would only recompile a theme locale when its own data changes. However, the output also includes fallback data from other locales, so we need to invalidate all locales when fallback locale data is changed. Building a list of dependent locales is tricky, so let's just invalidate them all.
Previously we had similar logic in two places:
1. A DiscourseURL rewrite, based on a site setting
2. Some logic in the user-index route
This commit moves everything into (2) to make things clearer and more consistent
We ask users to confirm their session if they are making a sensitive
action, such as adding/updating second factors or passkeys. This
commit adds the ability to confirm sessions with passkeys as an option
to the password confirmation.
Some of these files are quite small, and if we rename them in the same
commit where we inlined the template, Git may choose to see them as
different files. This commit forces Git to recognize the rename, which
will preserve the lineage of the refactored files.
This allows outlets for the post-text-selection-toolbar to
get just the raw markdown of the selected text for a quote,
rather than opening the composer.
This commit changes some plugin outlets in `<Discovery::Layout>`, `<Discovery::Navigation>` and `Discovery::Topics` to improve compatibility with existing customization, simplifying the migration process to the new discovery routes.
In these components, the standard plugin outlets will receive by default at least the arguments: `category` and `tag`.
Furthermore, two new wrapping plugin outlets were added to enable the conversion of existing template overrides to the new pattern: `discovery-list-area` and `topic-list-bottom`. The new template overrides will receive a `model` argument containing the full model handled by the route.
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Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
The `src` of js files is now dependent on the ember-cli/webpack build, so it's not a good thing to check in specs. In CI it passes because the ember-cli build is not run. But locally it would fail if you had a build in `app/assets/javascripts/discourse/dist`.
This commit updates the specs to check for the presence of a stable data attribute instead.
Follow-up to #24278 that is slightly less trivial.
* Some were "trivial" usages that were missed in the previous PR because the same file that had at least one other non-trivial usage.
* These involve extra arguments or inheritance but I have checked that they seem correct.